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"Christianity's Surprise" with Kavin Rowe

  • Podcast episode
  • Apr 1, 2021
C. Kavin Rowe
@CKavinRowe
(Guest)
open.spotify.com
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49 min
1 Recommender
1 Mention
In this Holy Week episode, Chris and Eddie are joined by Kavin Rowe, author of Christianity’s Surprise: A Sure and Certain Hope. After 20 years of scriptural immersion as the George... Show More

In this Holy Week episode, Chris and Eddie are joined by Kavin Rowe, author of Christianity’s Surprise: A Sure and Certain Hope. After 20 years of scriptural immersion as the George Washington Ivey Distinguished Professor of New Testament at Duke Divinity School, Rowe began to discern the growing significance of Christianity’s groundbreaking impact when it first entered the world. His book evokes the lost sense of the explosive power at the heart of Christian story, detailing the new hope and fresh vision that brushes up against the familiarity of scripture. Christianity’s Surprise draws readers closer to an understanding of Christianity as a gift from God, a never-ending mystery filled with a robust, joyful sense of surprise.Rowe discusses the missing sense of imagination in American Christianity, how God’s promises for the future reach into the present, the interconnectedness of humanity, and how Christian institutions have evolved over time. Rowe’s insight in this conversation offers encouragement to all who need hope and who are longing to rediscover the heart of Christianity. It ushers in a refreshing perspective on the life-giving power of hope.Check out Kavin Rowe’s book Christianity’s Surprise here:
https://www.abingdonpress.com/product/9781791008208/ 
Learn more about Kavin Rowe here:
https://divinity.duke.edu/faculty/c-kavin-rowe

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Jason Scott Montoya @JasonSMontoya · Oct 16, 2023
  • Post
"[The power of the resurrection] has two sides to it. The first one is, again, the training for death side. So part of what the early Christians did was, when focusing on the hope that the resurrection brings, is to pattern themselves in the world in a way that meant that they were training not to fear death. You can't just sort of spontaneously not fear death. And there's a way in which you'll never not fear death. But you can train against death, to hope in life and to hope beyond your own death. And the early Christians were intentional about this and had a robust sense that this is what they were doing... But if you've trained for death, with the hope that resurrection gives you, then you are prepared. You've rehearsed enough for that moment to know that death is not the worst thing that can happen to you." C. Kavin Rowe
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